Sunday, January 11, 2026

Benevolence and Self-Love

 There is a natural principle of benevolence in man, which is in some degree to society, what self-love is to the individual. And if there be in mankind any disposition to friendship; if there be any such thing as compassion, for compassion is momentary love; if there be any such things as the paternal of filial affections; if there be any affection in human nature, the object and end of which is the good of another; this is itself benevolence, or the love of another. Be it even so short, be it in ever so low a degree, or ever so unhappily confined; it proves the assertion, and points out what we were designed for, as really as though it were in a higher degree and more extensive. I must however remind you, that though benevolence and self-love are different; though the former tends most directly to public good, and the latter private; yet there are so perfectly coincident, that the greatest satisfactions to ourselves depend: upon our having benevolence in a due degree; and that self-love is one chief security of our right behaviour towards society. It may be added, that their mutual coinciding, so that we can scarce promote one without the other, is equally a proof that we were made for both.

Joseph Butler, Fifteen Sermons Preached at the Rolls Chapel, Sermon I: Upon the Social Nature of Man

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Circumstantiae

 In Chapter XXXIIII ("The Spinster Loses Some Sleep") of Owen Wister's The Virginia, we find the narrator turns the narrative into a brief discussion of ethics. The Virginian has been involved in a lynching of cattle rustlers; Molly Wood is struggling with this as a matter of conscience. Judge Henry is attempting to think through what he should say to her about it; a former federal judge, he doesn't approve of vigilantism in general, but he's also a Wyoming man who knows that the standard mechanisms of law cannot keep up with cattle rustlers enough to prevent them from degrading the entire social order into what is effectively a system of organized crime -- he has seen it happen. At this point, the narrator himself voices an opinion:

I cannot say that I believe in doing evil that good may come. I do not. I think that any man who honestly justifies such course deceives himself. But this I can say: to call any act evil, instantly begs the question. Many an act that man does is right or wrong according to the time and place which form, so to speak, its context; strip it of its surrounding circumstances, and you tear away its meaning. Gentlemen reformers, beware of this common practice of yours! beware of calling an act evil on Tuesday because that same act was evil on Monday!

As a narrative device, this works quite well in context -- Wister is not just telling a tale of Wyoming cowboys but trying to portray their culture sympathetically to people who do not share it. Aware of his audience, he recognizes that he needs to give the reader, just like Molly Wood, an actual way to see The Virginian's integrity and honor despite the foreignness of his ways. From this point he therefore goes on to provide an actual philosophical argument for his exhortation:

 On Monday I walk over my neighbor's field; there is no wrong in such walking. By Tuesday he has put up a sign that trespassers will be prosecuted according to law. I walk again on Tuesday, and am a law-breaker. Do you begin to see my point? or are you inclined to object to the illustration because the walking on Tuesday was not WRONG, but merely ILLEGAL? Then here is another illustration which you will find it a trifle more embarrassing to answer. Consider carefully, let me beg you, the case of a young man and a young woman who walk out of a door on Tuesday, pronounced man and wife by a third party inside the door. It matters not that on Monday they were, in their own hearts, sacredly vowed to each other. If they had omitted stepping inside that door, if they had dispensed with that third party, and gone away on Monday sacredly vowed to each other in their own hearts, you would have scarcely found their conduct moral. Consider these things carefully,—the sign-post and the third party,—and the difference they make. And now, for a finish, we will return to the sign-post. 

 Suppose that I went over my neighbor's field on Tuesday, after the sign-post was put up, because I saw a murder about to be committed in the field, and therefore ran in and stopped it. Was I doing evil that good might come? Do you not think that to stay out and let the murder be done would have been the evil act in this case? To disobey the sign-post was RIGHT; and I trust that you now perceive the same act may wear as many different hues of right or wrong as the rainbow, according to the atmosphere in which it is done. It is not safe to say of any man, “He did evil that good might come.” Was the thing that he did, in the first place, evil? That is the question.

Thus the narrator's argument is that change of circumstances can change the nature of the act in such a way that our judgment of its morality reasonably changes. If I cross a field on Monday, when I have no reason to think there is legal reason for me not to do so, and if I cross a field on Tuesday when there is a posted No Trespassing sign, I am in some sense doing the same thing, but the character of the action has changed. The legal difference makes a difference to the moral assessment. Very often, whether an act is moral or immoral depends on whether certain conditions are met, but circumstances can change whether the conditions are met. They can also shift what conditions are met. Thus if I ignore a No Trespassing sign because I am preventing a murder, the narrator says, the action is right. And very importantly, it's not a wrong action done for good reason (evil that good may come), but simply a good action. 

In ST 2-1.18.10, St. Thomas Aquinas considers what is essentially this same question: Can circumstance place moral action in the class of good or evil? The superficial reason why not is that circumstances are accidental to the nature or substance of the act itself, but in natural things the accidents do not change the nature of that in which they inhere. But, says Aquinas, this is because natural things are determinate to one and always come down to an ultimate form, so there's no way for a circumstance to contribute to what the thing is. It is not so in human actions, because reason is not determinate to one and for any particular reason why you might do something the way you do, you could have an even more basic reason. In natural things, the starting point for everything is fixed; in rational matters, we can choose our starting point. The nature or substance of an action is what Aquinas calls the object; it is what you are actually choosing to do; if we add a circumstance to it, this can sometimes be added in such a way that it specifies a precondition of the object, without changing the object itself but in such a way that it changes whether the action should be classified as good or bad:

Thus to appropriate another's property is specified by reason of the property being "another's," and in this respect it is placed in the species of theft; and if we consider that action also in its bearing on place or time, then this will be an additional circumstance. But since the reason can direct as to place, time, and the like, it may happen that the condition as to place, in relation to the object, is considered as being in disaccord with reason: for instance, reason forbids damage to be done to a holy place. Consequently to steal from a holy place has an additional repugnance to the order of reason. And thus place, which was first of all considered as a circumstance, is considered here as the principal condition of the object, and as itself repugnant to reason.

In general, this circumstantial sensitivity occurs when the circumstance shifts whether the object is concordant or discordant with reason, since the morality of an action is fundamentally about how it relates to reason. This means, first, that shift in classification is not necessarily done by only one circumstance; it could happen by a combination of circumstances. It further means that, depending on how they relate to reason's direction of the act, circumstances may have no effect at all on whether an action is moral or immoral, or may make it better or worse without changing whether it is moral or immoral (obvious examples being when the circumstances provide some excuse for a wrong action without making it cease to be wrong, or when there are better or worse ways to do something like being honest with someone), or they could shift entirely whether it is right or wrong.

In Wister's sign-post example, the new legal circumstance created by the posted regulation affects how the action will be reasoned through in the reasoning of a sensible person. The example makes it sound like it's a difference of time, but in fact it's being Monday or Tuesday is not relevant to the rightness or wrongness of the action. Aquinas follows Aristotle and Cicero in identifying eight circumstances of an action: who, what, about what, where, by what aids, why, in what way (or how), when. When is not the relevant morality-shifting circumstance, although it could in a situation where a deadline of some sort were set. The circumstance here seems to be what; on Monday you were not doing something that could be itself classified as trespassing, but on Tuesday you are. In the wedding case, the circumstances that make the shift seem to be how and by what, although that might depend on the exact intention of the parties. Early in the book, we see a change of circumstances that matters; Steve, The Virginian's friend, calls him a 'son of a bitch', and Trampas, soon to be The Virginian's enemy, also calls him a 'son of a bitch'; this is certainly affected by the circumstance who (Steve is a longtime friend, and therefore has more leeway than Trampas), but in context the most important circumstance is how, which we see as the scene with Trampas results in one of the most famous lines in Western fiction: "When you call me that, smile." In Steve's case it was obviously done in a good-natured, affectionate way; Trampas was being mean. 

In the case of the lynching of the cattle rustlers, this is a much more complicated situation. The what is killing human beings, which makes it (everyone in the story rightly agrees) a very grave action. The who, the about what, and the why are all important here: this is an honest attempt to serve genuine justice by punishing thieves with respect to a serious crime for which justice is difficult to obtain. In all of these circumstances the action fares better than (to use the contrast that is explicitly used in The Virginian) the lynching of Southern blacks, whose who, why, what, and about what make the latter an unmitigated evil. 

However there are further complications in the cattle rustling case, which is why the narrator is sympathetic to Molly Wood's crisis of conscience and Judge Henry's reservations. The how is mixed. It is defective, since it is done extralegally, which is why Judge Henry would prefer another way if there were one, although in this particular case it was done very carefully and with due regard for certain crude basics -- for instance, they have made very sure that the people they will be hanging are indeed the cattle rustlers who have been causing problems throughout the area. But The Virginian himself struggles with the action because of other who circumstances -- his position means that he, himself, has a special obligation to protect his men from the problems caused by cattle rustlers, but one of the cattle rustlers he is going to have to hang is his friend Steve. The narrator effectively argues that the lynching is right; but we see that the circumstances complicate the matter by making it defective in various ways, even if the circumstances don't change the fact that it is right. Other circumstances, like when and by what aids play no significant role in the moral decisionmaking itself, although under the circumstances, where perhaps does play an indirect role in how we assess whether the reasoning is appropriate (the same actions done for the same reasons would be more of a problem in the East than they are in the West).

On Aquinas's account, why and what are always the most important circumstances, so while they are not always determinative for morality in themselves (they could just shift how well or badly the action is done), they are the circumstances most likely to shift an action between being good and being bad. What should be distinguished from the object, i.e., what you are choosing to do, which is not a circumstance but the substance of the action; rather, it's more like the classification of the object in light of its context. Why is so important because it is the way the object of the action relates to things more important than itself. What is more, how important the other circumstances are almost always depends on their relation to why and what, and how they interact with those. This is also seen in the cattle rustler case, in which it matters very much why The Virginian and his fellow cowboys are hanging the cattle rustlers, and what the action means in the context of the budding and as-yet unstable civilization of Wyoming; it is these that give us the reason to recognize that, however short of the ideal the action itself might be, the action is nonetheless an expression of integrity and honor and justice. The justice is circumstantially defective, but genuinely just.

All of this is quite interesting, both Wister's basic argument and the fact that it fits so well with St. Thomas's account, in part because people do not always do well in taking circumstances into account. We tend to see this kind of reasoning as making the world 'shades of gray' and contrast it with 'black and white', which people often prefer. This is highly misleading. The fact that circumstances can shift an action back and forth over the border between good and bad does not make the distinction between good and bad any less sharp. The fact that our actions are complicated increases what we have to consider to assess their goodness or badness, but good and evil are not affected by our complicated relationship to each. There's a danger that one might read Wister's argument, or St. Thomas's, as a sort of relativism; but neither is claiming that good and bad are relative but that our actions are to be assessed by what is relevant to our reasons for them. If you take bread that is not yours, it matters whether you are doing so maliciously or to feed your family. If you tell the truth to someone, it matters whether you are doing so to hurt them or because you believe they have a right to know. If you try to help someone, it matters how you go about doing it. Whether or not you are breaking the law depends on where and when in the world you are. You have different obligations to different people, so to whom you do things can matter. The categories of good and bad are not complicated by this; what is complicated is how our actions are classified in those terms.

Actions are good and bad in terms of how they fit with reason, and circumstances are how even actions the same in themselves can be differently related to reason. The circumstances are not the only thing that affect the morality of the action (obviously the object of the action is the starting point), but they do affect it.

Friday, January 09, 2026

Dashed Off I

 As always, dashed off thoughts; these continue from the notebook begun at the end of July 2024.

***

Nehemiah & the role of the laity

The first principle of all scholarship is extensive acquaintance.

We want not the satisfaction of our preferences, but *no worse* than the satisfaction of our preferences, for we all recognize that there are cognitive and appetitive limits to our ability to prefer.

We have inclinations more foundational than preference.

literature as a study of basic forms of goods (and challenges and temptations related to them): life, knowledge, play, aesthetic experience, sociability/friendship, practical reasonableness, religion

objectivity as usefulness across perspectives

The role of the external world as intersubjective medium rquires that it have both purposiveness and expressiveness.

How a society organizes sport tells you a great deal about the society. Sports teams as big business do not exist in little village games; leagues in highly organized societies do not have the flexibility of those that have often improvised local organization.

Repentance is a cousin of humor.

Much of the attraction people have toward sex has less to do with physical desire or pleasure than with the fleshly sublimity of the experience of overwhelming and being overwhelmed, our own animal natures experienced as sublime.

"There are, in the final analysis, only two ways of making a choice between alternative ways of co-ordinating action to the common purpose or common good of any group. There must be either unanimity, or authority. There are no other possibilities.' Finnis

Every legal system creates a band or region of the semi-legal, in which things fall under the law in uncertain or confused ways that heavily depend on things that are not laws, or eve clearly recognized by laws, and in which things that are not laws are inconsistently and confusedly treated as if they were.

cGh cube
Special relativity reduces to Newtonian mechanics as c approaches infinity; quantum mechanics reduces to classical mechanics as h-bar approaches 0; general relativity reduces to special relativity as G approaches 0. Classical mechanics: (0,0,0); relativistic quantum gravity: (c, G, h) = (with relevant choice of units) (1,1,1).

In changing things, the actual cannot exceed the potential actualized. The 'exceeds' needs clarification.

Flashback, in medias res, and flashforward are relations between plot and narrative.

We are forgivable because we are mortal.

high philosophy, low philosophy, wild philosophy

the periodic table as a system of confirmed analogical inferences

analogical inferences using plausible, probable, or proven connections (ordered similarities)

Not bare similarity but ordered similarity is usually the foundation of analogical inferences.

All human beings are at the same time both human and also inhuman expressions of the natural world.

"Intermediate causes extend the reach of the ultimate cause by their nature, and so also contribute their natures to its causal action." Chastek

The diversity of artificial classifications is sometimes based on diversity of natural classifications; that is to say, a set of related artificial classifications does not always converge on one natural classification but on a set of related natural classifications.

the multiplication of perspectives in the Church as the material of Christian culture

Reason according to those principles that could be true without qualification.
-- Reason according to those principles that could be applied to the entire system of things.
-- Reason according to those principles consistent with the existence and nature of reason.
-- Reason according to those principles that could consistently be used by the entire community of rational inquirers.

In matters of skill, act in such a way as allows skill and virtue to be consistent with each other.
-- In matters of skill, act in such a way as allows practices of skill to be consistent with friendships of excellence.

If we are not morally responsible for our actions, we are not intellectually responsible for our conclusions, and for similar reasons.

fas : religio :: ius : iustitia

You cannot have good statistics with sloppy classifications.

Sorrow is beautiful when it enriches.

endearments as negotiating conditions of vulnerability

Most of the benefits of intelligence arise from social cooperation.

"When the fear of the Lord breathes upon a person, that person begins to fear God and wisely advances towards the perfection of good and upright works." Hildegard von Bingen

viriditas as the opposite of ariditas (Hildegar)

People have a bad habit of treating evidence of complexity as if it were evidential ambiguity.

A single glance may give good evidence of existence; the conditions must be very tightly constrained for a single glance to give good evidence of nonexistence.

civil friendship as an end of civil disobedience

Every sacrament involves an implicit theology of salvation, as captured in symbol, in Scriptural association, and in functional role within the sacramental economy.

Hos 6:1-3 and the Resurrection

The act of explaining something posits sufficient reason for it.

punishment and correction as jural good

rule of law as based on the principle of legal order as neither optional, nor arbitrary, nor infeasible, and on opposition to attempts to treat it as one of these

reason, authority, and tradition as the sources of legal order

Signs are often nested in signs.

-esque aesthetic concepts and found art

Thomas Wilson's description of accident (The Rule of Reason (1551)): ' the thing chauncing or cleving to the substance'

Wolff's universal rule for free actions (see Walschots): do that which makes you and your state or that of another more perfect, omit that which makes it more imperfect. 
--perfection is "consensum in varietate" (thus he thinks of it as integration or unification of one's life)
Crusius's "highest foundation of natural law": do that which is in accordance with the perfection of God and your relation to him, and furthermore what is in accordance with the essential perfection of human nature, and omit the opposite.
Crusius's "complete concept of divine natural law": do everything that is in accordance with the perfection of God, the essential perfection of your own nature and that all other creatures, and finally also the relations of things to each other that he has established, and omit the opposite, out of obedience to the command of your creator, as your natural and necessary sovereign.
Mendelssohn's "first law of nature": make your intrinsic and extrinsic condition and that of your fellow human being, in the proper proportion, as perfect as you can.
Tittel's "principle of happiness": act in such a way that through your action and disposition the common world, the well-being of sensing and thinking natures -- thus also your own happiness -- is best preserved and promoted.
(Kant's categorical imperative is an attempt to improve on these kinds of principles.)

ostension as the root of pronominality; pronouns are signs of particular ostensions
-- note that we can and do supplement and even at times substitute actual ostension for pronouns (co-speech and pro-speech ostensions)

Pantomime tends to have an SOV order even when the pantomimers speak a language with a different order (See Goldin-Meadow et al, "The Natural Order of Events: How Speakers of Different Languages Represent Events Nonverbally".)

Discussions of social ontology often confuse
(1) treating X as Y
(2) intending to treat X as Y
(3) intending that X be treated as Y
(4) acting as if X were Y
(5) making X Y
(6) X being Y in a classification in use.
These can overlap, but are not the same, and make reference to different kinds of act.

The Son is that of which it may be said that it is always false that there was when He was not.

Jesus Christ is the Son of God in the most perfect sense of sonship, being of the Father, both naturally and by adoption, both as proceeding and as received and acclaimed; Son both literally and figuratively, both ontically and morally, both by inheritance and by merit. He is thus Son truly and preeminently, unique and firstborn with respect to all creation.

Box formation
(1) Rule of Necessitation
(2) exceptionlessness with respect to simple enumeration
(3) derivation from Box at least as strong
(4) Rule of General / Conditional Necessitation
(5) self-evidence
-- Even in the same domain, these cannot always be assumed to deliver the same kind of Box; this requires further assumptions to coordinate them.

Necessitation is a problem for doxastic logics because we assume one belief-track per believer and the same axioms across belief-tracks. That is, we assume that believing is neither chunky nor fragmentary.

provability logics as strong, idealized doxastic logics

Our beliefs seem to cluster around pramanas and to require construction.

It is a common experience to discover that we were already committed to something before anyone, including ourselves, took us to be, because commitment is just part of rational living, i.e., living as a rational animal. It is also a common experience to find that people are trying to commit us to things to which we are not in fact committed.

nBP (n Believes p) -> p if True is taken not as real but as projected. If T is projected it seems plausible that nBp -> nB(nBp), unless one has an account of 'projected as true' that makes it independent of belief.

rigor as express layout and examination of possible points of error

"Such is the nature of novelty, that, where any thing pleases, it becomes doubly agreeable, if new; but if it displeases, it is doubly displeasing upon that very account." Hume

fluvial vs pluvial inspiration

adhesive vs inhesive personal relationships

The history of Arianism shows the Church trying out many alternatives but repeatedly finding only the homoousios adequate.
anhomoian -- homoian -- homoiousian -- homoosuian; three of the four were systematically eliminated in a multi-century disjunctive syllogism.

Job 38:17 -- 'doorkeepers of the underworld trembled' and the descent of hell

We come to believe by practicing believing, across all the fields with respect to which we form beliefs.

Everyone interprets the physical world allegorically; we see this even in atheists who take the vastness or regularity or materiality of the universe as implying a moral view of one kind or another.

Many deteriorations are clearly caused by chance events, and thus arise insofar as the deteriorating thing's actions and passions do not have a final cause. We preserve things by preventing such chance events (or reducing their likeliness).

Thursday, January 08, 2026

Habitude XVIII

 After this must be considered specific habitudes. And because habitudes, as was said, are distinguished through good and bad, first one must speak of good habitudes, which are virtues and other things adjoined to them, namely, gifts, beatitudes, and fruits; second, of bad habitudes, namely vices and sins. Now, about virtues, five things must be considered: first, the essence of virtue, second, its subject; third, the division of virtue; fourth, the cause of virtue; five, certain properties of virtue. About the first, four things must be asked. First, whether human virtue is habitude. Second, whether it is working habitude [habitus operativa]. Third, whether it is good habitude. Fourth, the definition of virtue.

To the first one proceeds thus. It seems that human virtue is not habitude. For virtue is the limit of power [ultimus potentiae], as is said in De Caelo I. But the limit of each thing is traced back to the genus of which it is the limit, as the point to the genus of the line. Therefore virtue is traced back to the genus of power, and not to the genus of habitude.

Further, Augustine says, in De Libero Arbit. II, that virtue is good use of free choice. But use of free choice is act. Therefore virtue is not habitude but act.

Further, we do not merit by habitudes but by acts; otherwise a human being would continuously merit, even sleeping. But we merit by virtues. Therefore virtues are not habitudes but acts.

Further, Augustine says, in the book De moribus Eccles., that virtue is order of love. And in the book of eighty-three quest. he says that ordering that is called virtue is enjoying what is to be enjoyed and using what is to be used. But order, or ordering, names either act or relatedness. Therefore virtue is not habitude, but act or relatedness.

Further, just as there are human virtues, there are natural virtues. But natural virtues are not habitudes, but sorts of powers. Therefore neither are human virtues. 

But contrariwise is that the Philosopher, in the book Predicament., posits kind of knowledge and virtue to be habitude.

I reply that it must be said that virtue names a kind of completion of power. But the completion of anything is considered chiefly in ordering to its end. But the end of power is act. Wherefore power is said to be complete according as it is determined to its act. But there are sorts of powers that are according to themselves determined to their acts, like active natural powers, and therefore such natural powers according to themselves are called virtues. But rational powers, which are proper to human beings, are not determined to one but have themselves indeterminate to many, are determined to act through habitude, as is obvious from what was said above. And therefore human virtues are habitudes.

Therefore to the first it must be said that sometimes virtue is said of that to which virtue is, to wit, either the object of virtue or its act, just as faith is sometimes called that which is believed, sometimes the believing itself, and sometimes the habitude itself by which one believes. Thus when it is said that virtue is the limit of power, 'virtue' is taken for the object of virtue. For that limit in which the power is able to be is that which is named the virtue of the thing, just as, if someone can carry a hundred pounds and no more, his power is considered according to a hundred pounds and not sixty. But the objection proceeded as if virtue were the limit of power essentially.

To the second it must be said that good use of free choice is said to be virtue according to the same reason, to wit, because it is that to which virtue is directed as its proper act. For the act of virtue is nothing other than good use of free choice.

To the third it must be said that we are said to merit something in two ways: (1) in one way, as by merit itself, in the way we are said to run by running, and in this way we merit by acts; (2) in another way, we are said to merit something as the principle of merit, and in this way we are said to run by moving power, and thus we are said to merit by virtues and habitudes.

To the fourth it must be said that virtue is called order or ordering of love as that to which it is virtue, for love in us is ordered through virtue.

To the fifth it must be said that natural powers are determined of themselves to one, but not rational powers. And therefore it is not similar, as was said.

[Thomas Aquinas, ST 2-1.55.prol & 2-1.55.1, my translation. The Latin is here, the Dominican Fathers translation is here.]

Virtue, of course, while not by any means the only kind of habitude, is the summit of them all, so it is essential for any serious study of habitude, and foundational for any study of human society and civilization. A key concept that is clearly in play here is that habitude is a principle of ordering and determination for actions that can in some way be otherwise (and thus for what is in some way fitting or appropriate rather than necessary), and in the case of virtue, for free actions.

Wednesday, January 07, 2026

Good

 You certainly do not love anything except what is good, since good is the earth, with the loftiness of its mountains, and the due measure of its hills, and the level surface of its plains; and good is an estate that is pleasant and fertile; and good is a house that is arranged in due proportions, and is spacious and bright; and good are animal and animate bodies; and good is air that is temperate, and salubrious; and good is food that is agreeable and fit for health; and good is health, without pains or lassitude; and good is the countenance of man that is disposed in fit proportions, and is cheerful in look, and bright in color; and good is the mind of a friend, with the sweetness of agreement, and with the confidence of love; and good is a righteous man; and good are riches, since they are readily useful; and good is the heaven, with its sun, and moon, and stars; and good are the angels, by their holy obedience; and good is discourse that sweetly teaches and suitably admonishes the hearer; and good is a poem that is harmonious in its numbers and weighty in its sense. And why add yet more and more? This thing is good and that good, but take away this and that, and regard good itself if you can, so will you see God, not good by a good that is other than Himself, but the good of all good.

Augustine, De Trinitate, Book VIII, Chapter 3.

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

Links of Note

 * David Sherwood, A Suggestive Note on the Esse of the Eucharist (PDF)

* Gregory Sadler, Von Hildebrand and Christian Philosophy: A Comparative Approach

* Lynne Kiesling, Jane Austen as Applied Moral Philosopher, at "Knowledge Problem"

* Bridger Ehli, Body, Coherence, and Hume's Galley (PDF). There are two major ways to read Hume's comment about the inadequacy of the galley effect, the extensive (it doesn't cover enough well enough) and the intensive (it doesn't get you a strong enough belief). I incline to the extensive reading, but this is an interesting argument for the intensive reading.

* Joel Miller, The Weird and Wild Mind of Charles Williams, at "Miller's Book Review"

* Terry Eagleton, Pregnant with Monsters, reviewing David Bather Woods's Arthur Schopenhaeuer, at "The London Review of Books"

* Miroslav Novák, The good citizen, the good man, and alternation in Aristotle's best constitutions (PDF)

* Amod Lele, Do you need anger for respect and accountability? at "Love of All Wisdom"

Monday, January 05, 2026

Fortnightly Book, January 4

 I was wondering what to do for the next fortnightly book, but some friends sent me Daniel Mendelsohn's translation of The Odyssey for Christmas, so that seems a good candidate. 

Of Homer we know very little beyond the two masterpieces bequeathed to civilization in his name; modern scholars tend toward thinking that The Iliad and The Odyssey have different authors, but modern scholars have been very wrong in their assessments about these works before, so we should perhaps take that as a possibility not yet proven. The Greeks did not have a stable theology or mythology, so the occasional theological and mythological differences between the two tell us nothing (imagine trying to get a completely coherent account of the gods from Aeschylus or Plato); differences in style and vocabulary can be explained by the differences in story and theme combined with the likely differences in redaction history. If we take the two to go back, in some way, to a single poet, which we follow tradition in calling 'Homer', there is no consistent tradition about him. Some ancient stories held that he was an eyewitness of the Trojan War, others that he lived centuries afterward. The best guess, taking into account both tradition and scholarly hypothesis, is that he would have lived somewhere in the eighth century BC.

The content of the two works, on the other hand, discusses events in the Late Bronze Age, about five hundred years earlier, and allowing for distortions of time and editing, apparently well. The Iliad, in particular, has tended to trounce its scholarly skeptics; over and over again, aspects of its story that were considered purely invented have turned out to be probably about right, with some approximation. The same is true of The Odyssey, which probably does capture, filtered through some later Greek ideas and perhaps revision for narrative unity, actual Mediterranean cultures and stories from the Late Bronze Age. These cultures are often called 'palace-cultures' because they tended to be built around the palace of a war-chief who extended his protection to the community around it. Palace-culture collapsed almost completely in the early twelfth century BC; that it seems to be reflected in the interactions between kings and between kings and commoners in The Odyssey seems a sign of the latter's broad accuracy in cultural depiction.

But, of course, it is the story, not the sociology, of The Odyssey that fundamentally matters. And with that there is perhaps no better place to start off than Aristotle's famous comment, which makes it a story fundamentally about absence from and return to home:

A certain man is absent from home for many years; he is jealously watched by Poseidon, and left desolate. Meanwhile his home is in a wretched plight -- suitors are wasting his substance and plotting against his son. At length, tempest-tost, he himself arrives; he makes certain persons acquainted with him; he attacks the suitors with his own hand, and is himself preserved while he destroys them. This is the essence of the plot; the rest is episode.